This article profiles the Microsoft Office Project 2007, Managing Projects (MCTS 70-632) exam, meant to be taken by those who use Microsoft Office Project Standard 2007 or Microsoft Office Professional 2007 standalone desktop features to build, maintain, and control well-formed project plans. Pearson IT Certification provides a variety of exam preparation tools to help our customers in their quest for certification. As part of our service to you, we have developed this Exam Profile series. Each profile is developed based on the testing experience of one of our trainers or authors. You won’t get exact questions or answers, but you will get a real feel for the exam. Each profile describes question forms, trouble spots, hints for exam preparation, and recommendations for additional study resources. Find out what you can expect to see on the exam and how you can better prepare for it.

The 70-632 exam is meant to be taken by those who use Microsoft Office Project Standard 2007 or Microsoft Office Professional 2007 standalone desktop features to build, maintain, and control well-formed project plans. If you plan to take this exam, you should have experience scheduling, estimating, coordinating, controlling, budgeting, and staffing projects and supporting other users of Office Project. Familiarity with key project management concepts and terminology is recommended.

Exam Details

Number of Questions: Approximately 55 questions (Since Microsoft does not publish this information, the number of exam questions may change without notice.)

Type of Questions: This test format is multiple choice.

Passing Score: 700

This passing score does not mean that you must answer 70 percent of the items correctly in order to pass the exam. The actual percentage varies from exam to exam and may be more or less than 70 percent. There is no penalty for guessing. No points are deducted for incorrect answers. If a question specifies that you must choose multiple correct answers, you must choose the exact number of correct answers specified in the question in order to earn a point for that item. Some of the questions on the exam may not count toward the calculation of your score. Microsoft will often throw a question in that is meant to gather data that will help them improve the exam.